ARTICLES. 
11 
ROOMS II.-VIII.] 
The fifth is at present occupied as a working-room for 
the Natural History Department. 
In the centre of the Sixth Room the general collection 
of insects is preserved in cabinets; for the regulations for 
seeing which, see note, p. 26- 
In the Seventh Room, which is also a working-room, is 
a portrait of Sir Isaac Newton in bas-relief, and near the 
door of entrance from the sixth room is preserved a spe¬ 
cimen of the Cyperus Papyrus, or Papyrus reed. 
J. G. Children. 
EIGHTH ROOM. 
The Cases No. 1 and 2, together with a table Case, 
contain a collection of impressions from ancient seals, 
royal, baronial, monastic, ecclesiastical (not monastic), 
municipal, and private, recently made for and presented 
to the Museum by Mr. John Doubleday. 
The Case No. 3 contains a large collection of bronze 
and flint Celts, Spear-heads, and Arrow-heads; the greater 
part of the flint arrow-heads and celts found in Ireland. 
Case 4 contains a collection of Hindoo Bronzes, and an 
assemblage of ancient Chess-men found in the sands upon 
the coast of one of the Western Islands of Scotland. 
Case 5. 
Various South Sea objects, not yet arranged. 
Case 6. 
Div. A. Portrait of Bion, broken from a bust or statue. 
Portrait, supposed of Diomede, also broken from a statue. 
Mutilated figure of Bacchus. 
Div. B. Aesculapius between two Gryphons. Two 
Aliptes or Anointers; they have been handles or stands 
for Mirrors. Head of an Amazon. Three heads of 
Ammon; two have been weights, one, part of a vase handle. 
Anubis. Ten figures or heads of Apollo; the one to the 
right hand, as in the act of bending his bow, being pro¬ 
bably the most excellent specimen of Grecian art existing; 
it was found in 1792 near Janina in Epirus. 
Div. C. Various representations of Bacchus. Among 
them is a remarkable Pantheic Bust, 7^ inches high, of 
very good workmanship ; it has goat’s dewlaps, bull’s ears, 
